OPINION
ROSS
DOUTHAT
The Victory Hamas Has Already Won
Oct. 28,
2023
A laptop with apparent blood stains is at the center
of an image of chaos inside a house.
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/28/opinion/hamas-violence-gaza.html
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In 2014, a
new state was formed in the heart of the Middle East. It had a capital, a
government, an army and almost 12 million subjects — a larger population than
Jordan or Israel. It also had a commitment to butchery, savagery and fanatical
violence that quickly earned it the enmity of the entire civilized world.
That
universal enmity made it hard to imagine how this state of many names — the
Islamic State, ISIS, Daesh — could long survive. At the time I offered a
speculative analogy to the Bolsheviks in Russia, another ruthless bunch of
revolutionary terrorists who faced general opprobrium and foreign
interventions, but survived to govern Russia for several generations.
But in the
event the more plausible scenario unfolded. By refusing even a sheen of
moderation, by shocking the conscience of the world while seeking direct
confrontation with Western power, the Islamic State enjoyed a temporary
recruitment boom followed by a crushing extirpation. Even a weakened American
empire in a more multipolar world was able to draw a circle around its
barbarism and drive it back into statelessness by force of arms.
That
antecedent hangs over the current crisis in Israel and Palestine. The
atrocities perpetrated by Hamas against innocent Israelis, the snuff films,
mutilations and delight in simple cruelty, inspired immediate analogies to the
Islamic State’s depredations. They also raised a question about Hamas’s
strategy. Was this, as some averred, a desperate but calculated leap to
barbarism, undertaken on the theory that only true grisliness would yield the
kind of Israeli reaction required to scuttle peacemaking between Israel and its
Arab neighbors?
Or
alternately, was it proof that Hamas had no normal strategic plan at all? Maybe
in matching the Islamic State’s cruelties it also matched that regime’s
self-destructive folly. Maybe, as The Atlantic’s Yair Rosenberg wrote, the
massacres were “rooted not in strategy, but in sadism.”
I do not
think we have to fully choose between these alternatives. Radical movements are
often multivalent, with ideologically motivated sadists and strategically
minded gamblers converging on the same plan despite somewhat different
self-understandings.
But there
is another way of thinking about extreme violence as a strategy, one with wider
implications than just its potential effects on Israeli policy and
Saudi-Israeli rapprochement.
Yes, a
movement deliberately going to extremes risks the Islamic State scenario, where
you isolate yourself so completely that you end up first morally delegitimized
and then cornered and destroyed. Clearly that’s the risk Hamas is running now.
It didn’t just hold power in Gaza, it enjoyed a certain kind of legitimacy, a
degree of favor with parts of the Western left and the Arab world that the
Islamic State never enjoyed or ever sought. And in embracing barbaric violence
it showed itself willing to light that legitimacy on fire.
But suppose
that you light the match, you cross the line, you leave the civilized world
behind, and a lot of your allies just … stay with you? Suppose you turn
southern Israel into an abattoir and you don’t end up like the Islamic State
thereafter? Suppose that, instead, most of your sympathizers just go to their
usual corners, some making excuses and downplaying the violence, others
committing fully to the glory of your cause?
Well, then,
as Damir Marusic writes in a troubling essay this week, you have achieved a
“revolutionary legitimacy” that you didn’t have before. You have embraced a
radical immoralism and forced your supporters to rewrite their own morality, to
excuse or embrace or (as often happens) to first excuse and then embrace. This
process, Marusic notes, effectively “asphyxiates any political program that is
less extreme than the revolutionary agenda.” And it closes off exits for your
allies in the future: Having followed you this far into darkness, each further
step becomes more natural, each step backward more difficult to take.
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Has Hamas
achieved this generally? No: Within much of the Western political establishment
they have clearly lost what modest legitimacy they previously enjoyed,
horrifying European leaders as well as the more pro-Israel American
center-left, and leaving themselves geopolitically exposed as Israel moves to
dismantle them.
But not as
exposed as the Islamic State, not even close. Hamas and its terrorists have
held or expanded their popular support across the Muslim world, they have
brought powerful figures like Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan rushing to their
defense, they have turned out protesters and inspired a surge of antisemitism
in Western cities, and they have retained various forms of sympathy within the
activist-academic complex.
All this
has to count as a provisional victory. Perhaps a win that will be swallowed up
by Hamas’s military and political destruction, perhaps a coup not worth the
cost.
But you can
see, for now, the shape of a dark strategic triumph that only extreme violence
could obtain.
Ross
Douthat has been an Opinion columnist for The Times since 2009. He is the
author, most recently, of “The Deep Places: A Memoir of Illness and Discovery.”
@DouthatNYT • Facebook
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